Community resources

The Global Intelligence Files

On Monday February 27th, 2012, WikiLeaks began publishing The Global Intelligence Files, over five million e-mails from the Texas headquartered "global intelligence" company Stratfor. The e-mails date between July 2004 and late December 2011. They reveal the inner workings of a company that fronts as an intelligence publisher, but provides confidential intelligence services to large corporations, such as Bhopal's Dow Chemical Co., Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon and government agencies, including the US Department of Homeland Security, the US Marines and the US Defence Intelligence Agency. The emails show Stratfor's web of informers, pay-off structure, payment laundering techniques and psychological methods.

STRATFOR Afghanistan/Pakistan Sweep - September 30, 2010

Released on 2013-02-19 00:00 GMT

Email-ID

5344106

Date

2010-09-30 19:46:05

From

Anya.Alfano@stratfor.com

To

Anna_Dart@Dell.com

PAKISTAN

1.) At least 20 young Muslims, who all hold British passports, are said to
have travelled into the lawless tribal areas of Pakistan to join training
camps run by al-Qaeda and their associated militant groups. They are
being trained to use firearms as well as explosives so that they can
launch random shooting sprees in the UK, Western intelligence sources
said. "We believe there are 15 to 20 Britons in the camps," said an
intelligence source in Islamabad, speaking on condition of anonymity. A
missile from one US unmanned drone killed several Britons in a training
camp in Pakistan, sources said, and the security services are now trying
to trace their links back to the UK. - UK Telegraph

2.) Two bullet-riddled bodies were found in or near the provincial capital
and two men were gunned down in Wadh area of Khuzdar district on
Wednesday. Sources said that a man was kidnapped by armed men from
Qambrani road area of Quetta in the morning. His body was found from the
Sariab area in the evening. Police also found the bullet-riddled body of
another man in a locality on the outskirts of Quetta. Meanwhile two men
who were in a car, were shot dead near Wadh area of Khuzdar district. The
motive for the double murder could not be determined. - Dawn

3.) Suspected militants attacked and damaged a checkpost in Shahabkhel, a
suburban village in the limits of Badbher police station, at midnight on
Wednesday, police and residents said. A resident of Batatal area of
Shaikhan, told that the firing started at midnight and continued for about
one hour. "We avoided coming out of the houses as both police and the
attackers used heavy weapons," he said. He added that some of the people
residing adjacent to the checkpost had extended support to police against
militants. In Kohat a mosque and a house were partially damaged in a bomb
blast in Shakardarra town of Kohat on Wednesday. Sources said that
unidentified persons had planted a time bomb near the gate of a house.
They added that doors of nearby mosque and the house were partially
damaged in the blast. - Dawn

4.) Unknown assailants have shot dead a man in Orangi on Thursday.
According to police, firing killed a 28-year-old man at Bukhari Road in
Orangi Town locality. - Geo

1.) Afghan and coalition security forces detained several suspected
insurgents in Helmand province Wednesday while in pursuit of a senior
Taliban leader operating in Now Zad district. The targeted individual has
60 fighters under his command and conducts improvised explosive device
attacks. He also allocates and distributes weapons, ammunition and IED
material throughout the district. Based on intelligence reports, the
security force targeted a compound in Now Zad district to search for the
targeted individual. Afghan forces used a loudspeaker to call for all
occupants to exit the buildings peacefully and then the joint security
force cleared and secured the compound. After initial questioning at the
scene, the security force detained three suspected insurgents. - ISAF
website

2.) Afghan and coalition forces conducted a deliberate clearing operation
aimed at disrupting the Taliban's freedom of movement in Kunduz province
Wednesday, killing three insurgents. The joint security force continuing
their efforts to disrupt enemy safe havens, targeted a series of compounds
in Chahar Darah district after intelligence indicated insurgent activity.
Afghan forces used a loudspeaker to call for the occupants of each
compound to exit the buildings peacefully and then secured them. The
joint force encountered armed enemy insurgents and coalition forces
engaged the threats, killing three. - ISAF website

3.) Afghan and coalition security forces detained one suspected insurgent
in Kandahar province Wednesday while in their continued pursuit of the
Taliban deputy district leader for Dand. The targeted individual
allocates and distributes ammunition and weapons, including
rocket-propelled grenades and machine guns, to fighters in his area. He is
also reportedly involved in the acquisition of suicide vests and
vehicle-borne improvised explosive devices. Intelligence tips led the
security force to a compound in Panjwa'i district. Afghan forces used a
loudspeaker to call for all occupants to exit the buildings peacefully and
then the joint security force cleared and secured the compound. After
initial questioning at the scene, the security force detained the
suspected insurgent. - ISAF website

4.) Afghan and coalition forces detained one suspected Taliban leader in
Badghis province yesterday while in pursuit of the Taliban shadow governor
of Bala Murghab district. The targeted individual is responsible for
coordinating improvised explosive device attacks in Bala Murghab against
civilians. The security force tracked one individual walking in a wadi in
Bala Murghab district. Coalition aircraft initiated containment fires
before the ground force interdicted the insurgent peacefully. After
initial questioning at the scene, the security force detained one
suspected insurgent. - ISAF website

5.) Afghan and coalition security forces detained several suspected
insurgents in Kandahar province Wednesday while in their continued pursuit
of a Taliban senior leader operating in Kandahar City and Panjwa'i
districts. The leader commands small groups of fighters in their attacks
against Afghan civilians, Afghan National Security and coalition forces.
Intelligence reports led the security force to a remote compound in
Panjwa'i district to search for the targeted individual. Afghan forces
used a loudspeaker to call for all occupants to exit the buildings
peacefully and then the joint security force cleared and secured the area.
After initial questioning at the scene, the security force detained the
suspected insurgents. The security force also found 30 pounds of wet
opium and detonation cord at the scene. - ISAF website

6.) An explosion rocked Taliban birthplace Kandahar in south Afghanistan
on Thursday, wounding eight people, all civilians, a local official said.
"Apparently it was a suicide car bomb attack targeted a convoy of NATO-led
troops but injured eight civilians," the source told Xinhua but declined
to be identified. The incident, he added, happened on the road leading to
Kandahar airfield. - Xinhua

7.) Taliban outfit fighting Afghan and NATO-led troops in the post-Taliban
Afghanistan has once again rejected Afghan government's offer for dialogue
and reconciliation through the recently formed High Council for Peace,
stressing no talks will take place in the presence of foreign troops, a
statement released to media by the outfit on Thursday said. "Such
so-called shuras or council can do nothing without the advisor of
foreigners and U.S. by supporting such councils wants to change the public
opinion," the Taliban statement said. - Xinhua

8.) Police captured a key Taliban commander during an operation against
militants in the northern Afghan province of Kunduz, provincial police
chief Abdul Rahman Syedkhili said Thursday. "Our police captured a
Taliban important commander Shamsudin alias Mullah Abu Bakr along with his
bodyguard during an operation in Chardara district last night," Syedkhili
told newsmen at a press conference. With the arrest of Abu Bakr, the
security situation in Chardara district would be further improved, the
police chief said. - Xinhua

9.) The production of opium - the raw material for heroin and a major
source of revenue for the Taliban insurgency - has halved in Afghanistan
due to crop infection this year, but prices have tripled. The sharp drop
in output is largely due to bad weather and a plant infection hitting the
major poppy-crop growing provinces of Helmand and Kandahar particularly
hard, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) said. As a result of the
damage, yield fell 48 per cent to 29.2 kilograms per hectare, from 56.1
kilograms per hectare compared with the previous year. The area of land
under poppy cultivation remained stable in 2010 at 123,000 hectares. -
UNODC

10.) Taliban report: Some 2 NATO invaders vehicles along with a security
puppets vehicle were destroyed by RPG fire in Aab-e-Khurma area of Farah
Road district at 10:00 pm last night. The exact number of killed and
wounded is not known. - Taliban website

11.) Taleban fighters have killed three former policemen in the southern
province of Ghazni, an official said on Thursday. The bullet-riddled
bodies of the three men, who had already left the police force, were found
in the Deh Yak district, police official Faiz Mohammad Tofan said.
Residents of the Sulemanzi area, the men were ordered down a car on their
way to southeastern Paktia province, he told Pajhwok Afghan News. The
ex-policemen were shot in their heads and faces. Sher Khan, deputy head of
the district tribal council, confirmed the killings but offered no
details. A Taleban mouthpiece, Zabihollah Mojahed, claimed responsibility
for the deaths and said the three were still serving as policemen. -
Pajhwok

At least 20 Britons are undergoing terrorist training in Pakistan to
launch Mumbai-style shootings and suicide attacks in Britain, intelligence
sources have told.

The young Muslims, who all hold British passports, are said to have
travelled into the lawless tribal areas of Pakistan to join training camps
run by al-Qaeda and their associated militant groups.

They are being trained to use firearms as well as explosives so that they
can launch random shooting sprees in the UK, Western intelligence sources
said.

"We believe there are 15 to 20 Britons in the camps," said an intelligence
source in Islamabad, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The disclosure comes after the CIA launched drone strikes on Pakistan
training camps in North and South Waziristan in an attempt to disrupt an
al-Qaeda plot to launch an attack targeting Britain, France and Germany.

The plans would have seen terrorists sent on to the streets, probably of
the capital cities, to shoot random passersby before heading in to
landmark buildings. Intelligence sources said that the attacks would have
been coordinated for maximum impact and may have been aimed at financial
institutions. However, the terror cells had not yet travelled to Europe
and the targets were still unclear.

A missile from one US unmanned drone killed several Britons in a training
camp in Pakistan, sources said, and the security services are now trying
to trace their links back to the UK.

MI5 is thought to be uncomfortable that an ongoing operation has become
public while they were still building up a picture of the terrorists'
support network.

"This is an ongoing operation with a constantly changing dynamic," one
security source said. "There are local, national and international links,
including Pakistan."

Intelligence agencies in Britain and the US were in the early stages of
establishing the full details of the plot but MI5 had traced it from
Pakistan back to Britain, sources told The Daily Telegraph.

A US intelligence source said the threat was "credible, but not specific"
and could have included other European countries such as Spain and Italy,
or even the US.

Some of the intelligence is understood to have originated with the capture
of a German national in Kabul, Afghanistan in July. Ahmed Sidiqi, 36, is
said to have talked of training with explosives and weapons and of plans
to launch attacks in Germany and Europe.

Sidiqi attended the Masjid Taiba mosque, formerly known as the Al-Quds
mosque, in Hamburg, which was also attended by the leaders of the
September 11 attacks.

German security sources said there were "increasing rumblings" about
potential attacks and they were aware of intelligence pointing to al-Qaeda
attacks in Europe and the United States.

James Clapper, US intelligence chief, said in a statement: "As we have
repeatedly said, we know al Qaeda wants to attack Europe and the United
States. We continue to work closely with our European allies on the threat
from international terrorism, including al Qaeda."

The US has fired at least 21 missiles so far this month in Pakistan's
tribal areas, the highest monthly total in the past six years.

On Saturday, Sheikh Fateh al-Masri, a senior al-Qaeda commander, was
thought to have been killed in North Waziristan, according to unconfirmed
reports.

Fateh, also known as Abdul Razzaq, is said to have taken over operational
command of al-Qaeda in Pakistan and Afghanistan and is thought to have
been in command of the European plot.

"It shouldn't surprise anyone that links between plots and those who are
orchestrating them lead to decisive American action," a US official said.
"The terrorists who are involved are, as everyone should expect, going to
be targets. That's the whole point of all of this."

The 10 Pakistani terrorists who attacked Mumbai in India two years ago
killed 166 people and injured more than 300. The attack marked a shift in
tactics in the use of terrorist soldiers on the ground using guns and
grenades, rather than suicide bombers targeting transport networks.

In response police have reassessed the way they deal with attacks.
Metropolitan Police tactical response teams have been training on a "shoot
to kill" basis after briefings that most deaths in such an attack were
likely to occur in the first 30 minutes of an attack.

PESHAWAR, Sept 29: Suspected militants attacked and damaged a checkpost in
Shahabkhel, a suburban village in the limits of Badbher police station, at
midnight on Wednesday, police and residents said.

Hussain Khan, a resident of Batatal area of Shaikhan, told this
correspondent that the firing started at midnight and continued for about
one hour. "We avoided coming out of the houses as both police and the
attackers used heavy weapons," he said.

He added that some of the people residing adjacent to the checkpost had
extended support to police against militants. He said that residents of
the area used to remain indoors whenever such incidents occurred, as some
people were killed in the past but their families were not paid
compensation.

He suggested that checkposts should be established away from the main
population so that lives of the locals would not be put at risk.

A police official said that the attackers tried their best but failed to
succeed in their nefarious designs. He said that the building was damaged
but the law enforcers remained unhurt.

He said that both police and Frontier Constabulary men had showed
extraordinary performance in repulsing the attackers.

He said that the attackers seemed to have come there from Bara side.
"Police have not counted their number nor identified them but they must be
members of Mangal Bagh-led militant group Lashkar-i-Islam," he said.

Officials at Badbher police station, when contacted, said that a case
against unidentified terrorists had been registered but no one had so far
been arrested in this connection.

They said that efforts were made to take action and personnel of the law
enforcement agencies had also submitted proposals for the purpose.

KOHAT: A mosque and a house were partially damaged in a bomb blast in
Shakardarra town of Kohat on Wednesday.

Sources said that unidentified persons had planted a time bomb near the
gate of a house.

They added that doors of nearby mosque and the house were partially
damaged in the blast.

The targeted individual has 60 fighters under his command and conducts
improvised explosive device attacks. He also allocates and distributes
weapons, ammunition and IED material throughout the district. Based on
intelligence reports, the security force targeted a compound in Now Zad
district to search for the targeted individual.

Afghan forces used a loudspeaker to call for all occupants to exit the
buildings peacefully and then the joint security force cleared and secured
the compound.

After initial questioning at the scene, the security force detained three
suspected insurgents.

The assault force did not fire their weapons and they protected the women
and children for the duration of the search.

KABUL, Afghanistan (Sept. 30) - Afghan and coalition security forces
detained one suspected insurgent in Kandahar province Wednesday while in
their continued pursuit of the Taliban deputy district leader for Dand.

The targeted individual allocates and distributes ammunition and weapons,
including rocket-propelled grenades and machine guns, to fighters in his
area. He is also reportedly involved in the acquisition of suicide vests
and vehicle-borne improvised explosive devices. Intelligence tips led the
security force to a compound in Panjwa'i district.

Afghan forces used a loudspeaker to call for all occupants to exit the
buildings peacefully and then the joint security force cleared and secured
the compound.

After initial questioning at the scene, the security force detained the
suspected insurgent.

The assault force did not fire their weapons and they protected the women
and children for the duration of the search.

KABUL, Afghanistan (Sept. 30) - Afghan and coalition security forces
detained several suspected insurgents in Kandahar province Wednesday while
in their continued pursuit of a Taliban senior leader operating in
Kandahar City and Panjwa'i districts.

The leader commands small groups of fighters in their attacks against
Afghan civilians, Afghan National Security and coalition forces.
Intelligence reports led the security force to a remote compound in
Panjwa'i district to search for the targeted individual.

Afghan forces used a loudspeaker to call for all occupants to exit the
buildings peacefully and then the joint security force cleared and secured
the area. After initial questioning at the scene, the security force
detained the suspected insurgents.

The security force also found 30 pounds of wet opium and detonation cord
at the scene.

The assault force did not fire their weapons and they protected the women
and children for the duration of the search.

6.)

Eight civilians wounded in explosion in Kandahar in S Afghanistan

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/world/2010-09/30/c_13537365.htm

2010-09-30 14:20:08

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan, Sept. 30 (Xinhua) -- An explosion rocked Taliban
birthplace Kandahar in south Afghanistan on Thursday, wounding eight
people, all civilians, a local official said.

"Apparently it was a suicide car bomb attack targeted a convoy of NATO-led
troops but injured eight civilians," the source told Xinhua but declined
to be identified.

The incident, he added, happened on the road leading to Kandahar airfield.

7.)

Taliban downplay Afghan gov't backed High Council for Peace

2010-09-30 14:23:30

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/world/2010-09/30/c_13537366.htm

KABUL, Sept. 30 (Xinhua) -- Taliban outfit fighting Afghan and NATO-led
troops in the post-Taliban Afghanistan has once again rejected Afghan
government's offer for dialogue and reconciliation through the recently
formed High Council for Peace, stressing no talks will take place in the
presence of foreign troops, a statement released to media by the outfit on
Thursday said.

"Such so-called shuras or council can do nothing without the advisor of
foreigners and U.S. by supporting such councils wants to change the public
opinion," the Taliban statement said.

It also described the NATO-led troops in Afghanistan as an occupying one
and noted that the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan ( the name of ousted
Taliban regime) would continue its war against the occupying foraging
forces till their eviction from the country.

The Taliban outfit in another statement also rebuffed the remarks of
NATO-led forces commander in Afghanistan General David Petraeus in which
he said days ago the Taliban high ranking officials had contacted Afghan
government.

It stressed that Taliban had not contacted the Afghan administration and
believe the solution of Afghanistan problems lies in the withdrawal of
foreign troops from Afghanistan and not in initiating secret contacts.

"Our police captured a Taliban important commander Shamsudin alias Mullah
Abu Bakr along with his bodyguard during an operation in Chardara district
last night," Syedkhili told newsmen at a press conference.

With the arrest of Abu Bakr, the security situation in Chardara district
would be further improved, the police chief said.

He also emphasized that three more Taliban militants had been killed
during operations elsewhere in Kunduz province over the past 24 hours.

Taliban militants have yet to make any comment.

Abu Bakr is the second significant Taliban commander who has been captured
in Kunduz over the past one month.

Chardara district has been regarded as the stronghold of Taliban militants
in Kunduz and the neighboring Baghlan province since the beginning of this
year.

ienna/Kabul, 30 September 2010 (UNODC) - While opium poppy cultivation
remained at 2009 levels, opium production halved in 2010, says the United
Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), 2010 Afghan Opium Survey
released today.

"This is good news but there is no room for false optimism; the market may
again become lucrative for poppy-crop growers so we have to monitor the
situation closely," said Yury Fedotov, Executive Director of UNODC.

The bulk of cultivation continued to take place in the restive southern
and western provinces of the country, according to the summary findings.

"These regions are dominated by insurgency and organized crime networks.
This underscores the link between opium poppy cultivation and insecurity
in Afghanistan, a trend we have observed since 2007," said Mr. Fedotov.

Cultivation stable

Opium cultivation remained stable at 123,000 hectares (ha), down from a
peak of 193,000 ha in 2007, with ninety eight per cent of cultivation
taking place in nine provinces in the south and west of the country.
Hilmand and Kandahar took the lion's share with Hilmand alone accounting
for 53 per cent of total opium cultivation in Afghanistan.

All 20 poppy-free provinces remained so in 2010 and four other provinces
(Kunar, Laghman, Zabul and Hirat) were almost poppy-free.

Falling production

Total 2010 opium production is estimated at 3,600 metric tons (mt), down
48 per cent from 2009. The decrease was largely due to a plant infection
hitting the major poppy-crop growing provinces of Hilmand and Kandahar
particularly hard.

As a result of the damage, yield fell 48 per cent to 29.2 kilograms per
hectare, from 56.1 kilograms per hectare compared with the previous year.

About 87 per cent of total opium production took place in the south (6,026
mt) and 12 per cent in the west (825 mt) in 2009.

Plant diseases are a normal occurrence all over the world. In Afghanistan,
which produces 92 per cent of the world's opium, they can affect the poppy
crop. The current strain attacks the roots of the plant, climbing up the
stem and causing the opium capsule to wither away. These signs are similar
to those observed in previous such outbreaks in the region.

Rising prices

Last year, surveys indicated that farmers were willing to consider
abandoning opium cultivation due to the low price it fetched. After a
steady decline from 2005 to 2009, prices are rising again, effectively
reversing a steady downward trend. In 2010, the average farm-gate price of
dry opium at harvest time (weighted by production) was US$ 169 per kg - a
164 per cent increase over 2009, when the price was US$ 64 per kg.

In the short run, the decline in opium production has pushed prices up.
Despite the drop in overall production, the farm-gate income of opium
farmers rose markedly. Now that opium is commanding high prices again,
the gross income for farmers per hectare has increased by 36 per cent to
US$ 4,900.

"We will have to monitor price trends for several months to gain a true
indication of how the opium market will be affected by the drop in
production this year", said Mr. Fedotov. "If prices continue to rise,
this will indicate a supply shortage in the market and if prices flatten
or decline, this will indicate that stockpiles accumulated from the last
few years' over-production are beginning to enter the market".

Compounding the problem was the low price of wheat, an important
alternative crop. "We are concerned that in combination with the high
price of opium, a low wheat price may also drive farmers back to opium
cultivation" said Mr. Fedotov.

Eradication was at its lowest level since the monitoring system started in
2005. The Afghan Minister of Counter-Narcotics and UNODC verified that
governor-led programmes had eradicated a total of 2,316 ha. Although
Hilmand saw the highest number of hectares eradicated (1,602 ha), that
figure was dwarfed by the scale of opium cultivation in that province
(65,045 ha).

Once again, the human toll was high. Although the number of attacks
against governor-led eradication teams decreased this year, they suffered
28 fatalities, against 21 witnessed in 2009.

Shared international responsibility

Mr. Fedotov called for a comprehensive strategy to rein in the Afghan
opium threat, including by strengthening the rule of law and security, and
spurring development efforts. "Corruption and drug trafficking feed upon
each other and undermine any development effort in Afghanistan. We must
continue to encourage the Afghan government to crack down on corruption.

More robust regional cooperation was essential to contain the illicit
drugs trade, said Mr. Fedotov. "In confronting the threat posed by Afghan
opium, we must not forget that this is a global problem, one that affects
both health and security in many countries around the world. Thus our
responses should not be limited to Afghanistan itself, or even to the
major countries affected by the opium trade", he stressed.

The first priority was to curb demand. "We must not forget the consumer
side of opium's deadly equation. Unless we reduce the demand for opium
and heroin, our interventions against supply will not be effective. As
long as demand drives this market, there will always be another farmer to
replace one we convince to stop cultivating, and another trafficker to
replace one we catch."

"We need a broader strategy to support farmers throughout Afghanistan by
providing them with access to markets and a secure environment. Stability
and security, combined with sustainable alternative development
opportunities, will give farmers the chance to make a living without
resorting to opium poppy cultivation", said Mr. Fedotov.

Some 2 NATO invaders vehicles along with a security puppets vehicle were
destroyed by RPG fire in Aab-e-Khurma area of Farah Road district at 10:00
pm last night. The exact number of killed and wounded is not known.
(Taliban website)

11.)

Taleban kill three ex-policemen in Afghan east - agency

Text of report in English by Afghan independent Pajhwok news agency
website

Ghazni City: Taleban fighters have killed three former policemen in the
southern province of Ghazni, an official said on Thursday [30 September].

The bullet-riddled bodies of the three men, who had already left the
police force, were found in the Deh Yak district, police official Faiz
Mohammad Tofan said.

Residents of the Sulemanzi area, the men were ordered down a car on their
way to southeastern Paktia province, he told Pajhwok Afghan News.

The ex-policemen were shot in their heads and faces. Sher Khan, deputy
head of the district tribal council, confirmed the killings but offered no
details.

A Taleban mouthpiece, Zabihollah Mojahed, claimed responsibility for the
deaths and said the three were still serving as policemen.

Nearly two weeks back, the militants killed five workers of a private
security company in Deh Yak, located 22 kilometres east of the provincial
capital, on main Kabul-Kandahar highway.